A mitochondrial outer membrane protein TOMM20 maintains protein stability of androgen receptor and regulates AR transcriptional activity in prostate cancer cells.
Prostate cancer (PCa) is an androgen-dependent malignancy, with HSP90 and HSP70 serving as classical molecular chaperones that maintain androgen receptor (AR) protein stability and regulate its transc
APA
Yin L, Dai Y, et al. (2025). A mitochondrial outer membrane protein TOMM20 maintains protein stability of androgen receptor and regulates AR transcriptional activity in prostate cancer cells.. Oncogene, 44(21), 1567-1577. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41388-025-03328-w
MLA
Yin L, et al.. "A mitochondrial outer membrane protein TOMM20 maintains protein stability of androgen receptor and regulates AR transcriptional activity in prostate cancer cells.." Oncogene, vol. 44, no. 21, 2025, pp. 1567-1577.
PMID
40044984
Abstract
Prostate cancer (PCa) is an androgen-dependent malignancy, with HSP90 and HSP70 serving as classical molecular chaperones that maintain androgen receptor (AR) protein stability and regulate its transcriptional activation. Surprisingly, our study identified TOMM20, a mitochondrial outer membrane protein, as a potential molecular chaperone with similar roles to HSP90/HSP70. We found that TOMM20 expression is elevated in PCa tissues and cell lines and positively correlates with AR levels. RNA-seq analysis revealed that TOMM20 knockdown significantly reduced the mRNA levels of AR-regulated genes. Additionally, the protein level of KLK3 (PSA) decreased, and AR binding to the androgen response element (ARE) of the KLK3 promoter was diminished following TOMM20 knockdown, leading to decreased KLK3 gene transcription. Furthermore, TOMM20 depletion reduced both cytoplasmic and nuclear AR protein levels and facilitated AR degradation via an E3 ubiquitin ligase SKP2-mediated ubiquitin-proteasome pathway, independent of heat shock proteins (HSPs). To our knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating that TOMM20, a mitochondrial outer translocase protein, stabilizes AR protein and enhances its transcriptional activity, while its knockdown promotes AR degradation through the SKP2-mediated ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. These findings suggest that TOMM20 may serve as a potential biomarker for PCa progression and a promising therapeutic target for drug development.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Receptors, Androgen; Prostatic Neoplasms; Male; Protein Stability; Cell Line, Tumor; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Membrane Transport Proteins; Transcriptional Activation; Kallikreins; Mitochondrial Precursor Protein Import Complex Proteins; Mitochondria; Transcription, Genetic; Prostate-Specific Antigen
같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)
- Commentary: A lung specific escape of intravascular metastatic breast cancer cells from cytotoxic T cell killing.
- One-Step Urinary EV Capture-to-SERS on a Temperature-Responsive AuEIH Substrate with Transformer-Based Urologic Cancer Classification.
- Thyroblastoma as a manifestation of DICER1 syndrome with confirmed germline mutation and comprehensive literature review.
- Correction: TACE-HAlC combined with Donafenib and immune checkpoint inhibitors for BCLC stage C HCC patients (THEME study): a retrospective IPTW-adjusted cohort study.
- The FBXW7-KMT2 axis in cancer-associated fibroblasts controls tumor growth via an epigenetic-paracrine mechanism.